

Our local one was going to be the 31st, the one tome I could make it. But weather delayed it until February 21st, which I won’t be able to make :(.
Nice. Software developer, gamer, occasionally 3d printing, coffee lover.


Our local one was going to be the 31st, the one tome I could make it. But weather delayed it until February 21st, which I won’t be able to make :(.


My first apartment had Comcast or DSL. I signed up, a month later I was part of their “experimental” data caps program. During the course of this I had a sales rep call and fell for the pitch. Turns out, he downright committed fraud and made promises that were patently untrue. It took 48 hours of back and forth in various mediums over the course of a month to get the situation resolved.
The solution was to complain on reddit and have an employee give me a one time use code to use Comcast’s VIP support center… Which is ridiculous that it exists in the first place.
I predicated all my subsequent (about 4) moves with “Comcast is not in the area” as a filtering criteria. Fuck Comcast.


Here’s an archive link in case anyone else refuses to give Substack views due to their affinity for Nazis: https://archive.is/ns4Yq


Well, I wouldn’t call it’s premium. Unlocked is closer to MSRP, whereas carrier locked is being subsidized by the carrier and whatever requirements they have in place. You’ll usually end up paying more in the long run then if you went with unlocked and a MVNO.


I used to run a public link shortener. Once the scammers catch wind and add it to their rotation all bets are off. I got inundated with reports and my standing with my web host would have been at risk as well (long story). I now use Shlink on those domains lol.


No toes were harmed! Well, aside from that confidently incorrect user elsewhere on the post.


Thanks for clarifying! It’s been a while since I’ve worked with IPv6 directly, fortunately it “just works” in my current home environment and since I’m no longer doing colocation for my self hosted stuff it’s on the back burner.


Ah - yeah the /128 is what the ISP used to route traffic to your router. I believe that’s IPv6 PD (prefix delegation) - the router uses DHCPv6, gets given that /128 it’ll use for the ISP, then the ISP delegates the /64 (or other sizes) to the router.


If your ISP is doing to right IPv6 should be setup for SLAAC, in which case they would give you an entire /64. I don’t use OpenWRT, but I assume it’s showing you the IPv6 /64 from IPv6-PD used for SLAAC, and the /128 the router is using to communicate with the ISP If it’s SLAAC your client devices should be getting two IPv6 addresses as well. One is for privacy, that’s the one websites will see when you connect but can’t be hit, and the other is the one you would use to reach your computer from another device.
Edit: Refer to @[email protected]’s child comment for a better explanation with some corrections / clarifications.
Just replace Milo with an immigrant neighbor or a woman on the run from domestic abuse and the ad gets much darker!